The evening world. Newspaper, January 12, 1917, Page 20

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; ’ His Hero Gone! _ wyetghe. 191 br Tae Brom Filan tig Oo (tim New York Evening World.) dy the Preas Publishing Company, Nos. 62 to "ark Row, New York RALPH PULITZER, President, 63 Park Row. J. ANGUS SHAW, Treasurer, 63 Park Row. s JOSEPH PULITZER, Jr, Secretary, 63 Park Row, Entered at the Post-Office at on Ra: to T Becond-Class Matter, Kiand the Continent and « World for the United All Countries tn the International and Canada. Postal Union One Tear... ae vensevene C0E01OND POP, ce rsrcsvessvesencevese & Ge Month ns nese ses neee +30 /On® MOntT... aeccsacsecrensmnes VOLUME 57. eh > 5 aw APPR EL ET «eNO. 20,233 THE ENTENTE REPLY. N ACTUAL SUBSTANCE the reply of the Entente Governments | to President Wilson’s request for a statement of their war aims contains little that is new. The restoration of Belgium, Serbia and Montenegro, the evacua tion of invaded territories, the liberation of enslaved nationalities, the restitution of appropriated provinces, the suppression of Turkish tyranny in Europe, the assurance of reparation and indemnity, the guarantee of adjustments which shall “prevent an apparent security: from only facilitating new aggressions”—all these conditions of peace have been repeatedly and fully insisted upon by Allied statesmen! speaking separately. So far as substance goes, the chief significance of the document fs in its formal and collective presentation of Entente purposes in a form which permits what the President desired—the possibility of frank comparison. More important than the substance is the tone. Not only is the latter courtcous without diplomatic effort, but it clearly implies recognition of the right of neutral nations to ask questions and receive answers. I indicates a readiness to discuss the struggle and its bear-| ings from a broader point of view than any to which the Powers in- volved havs so fat attained, Thanks to the President of the United States, the world seems Mkely to have a clarification of the war. Germany can scarcely afford persistently to refuse discussion of her objects on the plane which the allies have wisely chosen. Every question, every reply, every exposition of purpose, every statement of terms on the part of one belligerent or group of bellig- erents tends to render more exact, more carefully considered, the declarations of the other side. ‘he more the need of such declara- tions forces the Governments of nations at war to concentrate atten- tion upon the realities of their respective situations, upon their obligations toward their own peoples, upon their relations with neu- tral countries, the more chance will peace have to get a hearing and propose its permanent adjustments. “War is preferable to Prussian domination of Europe,” declared the British Prime Minister in his Guildhall speech yesterday. “The Allies have made that clear in their reply to Germany and clearer still in their reply to the United States.” So they have. But we also find made clear in the reply to the United States the following: - It goes without saying that !f the Allies wish to lHberate Europe from the brutal covetousness of Prussian militarism, it has never been their design, as has been alleged, to encompass the extermination of the German peoples or their political disap- Pearance, Slowly but surely the making clear of this last point alone may * prove to be what is destined to end the war, overthrow Prussianism tt SOLE COL, CODY BMEZALO BOM a nl BPR oe EY) t “and produce a new Germany. t To etart the clarifying process all along the line was the Presi-| Love Under False Pretense dent’s purpose. Who says the Entente answer does not offer every hope that he has made a promising beginning? By Sophie Irene Loeb. Conrright. 1017. by ‘The, rhe New pretend one thing and feel another and York Evening Worid,) ‘get away with t when, will we realize that you can't | ) | | The most delightfuy Sarl jin the world have Been severed be- jcauso of an assumed feeling of dis- Fifty Boys and Girls | Famous in History oes By Albert Payson Terhune Copyright, 1917, by The Prem Publishing Oo. (The New York Drening World.) NO. 37. MOZART—The Boy Musician. TINY three-year-old boy with an enormous fourteen-syliable name sat playing with his toys on the floor of his father’s studio in Salzburg, Austria, one day in 1759, The boy was John Chrysostom Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, eon of « Salsburg music master. Mozart's seven-year-old sister, Maria, was undergoing the tortures of her daily clavier lesson, She had struck an especially hard tangle of notes and could not play them. Her father went over the dificult passage for her. Still she could not play it. In annoyance at such stupidity, the Mozart baby scrambled to bis feet, toddled across the room and proceeded to play the tough bit of music without a flaw. His father was dumfounded. ven in those | days of cruelly overworked chfldren, it seemed incredible that a three | year-old baby should have done such a thing. Yet Mozart had learned the entire passage from hearing his father play it once. This was the beginning of Morart’s musical life. His father recoge nized him as @ prodigy, and might have worked him to death had not the ohild’s ambition to learn been even stronger than the father’s eager+ neas to teach, At four Mozart could come home from concerte S gbnote and play from memory the most complex selections i} tk i he hed heard there. A year or two later he began | leduuneon to compose music; even before he knew how to write down the notes, His father had to transcribe the tm provisations for him, as the dittle fellow played them on the clavier, Be« fore he was aeven he had composed a@ concerto for full orchestra, A little later he and his @ister were taken on a concert tour through Purope, Tho tour was @ big euccess, Every one was enthusiastic over the wonderful child musician. a ‘Then, at fourteen, Mozart boldly applied for membership in the Musto Guild, of Bologna, Italy, one of the most tmportant musical socteties on earth, As a test of his qualification to membership, the theme of an in- tricate anthem was played to him and ho was bidden to elaborate tt end to harmonize {t in four parte, Mozart was locked in asroom with pen and paper. In less than half an hour he had completed his task; ang had built up the anthem eo bril« Mantly that he was elected to full membei:ship without a dissenting vote, Hig next adventure threatened him with severe penalties, He attended a rendition of Allegt's tmmortal "Miserere,” In the Sistine Chapel of the Vatican at Rome. This Miserere was considered so sacred and beautiful that the Papal musicians were strictly forbidden to take any part of ite score away from the chapel or to play it elsewhere, It was not on sala, and no one could hear it except at the Vatican, Mozart Hstened intently to the intricate “Miserere,” then went hom@ and from memory copled every noto of it without a single blunder, He played ft next day to an assemblage of musicians, Thetr fam amazed delight at the fourteen-year-old boy's feat of } A Test of memory was tempered by a dread lest the Pope be, memery offended at the stealing of the cherished secret of the I “Miserere.” But when His Holiness heard of !t he merely sent for young Mozarty gave him the Papal blessing and told him that so great a musical talen@ was a direct gift from Heaven, In spite of young Mozart's genlus the musictans of Austria and Gere many set themselves to wreck his career, Furlous that a half-grown boy should be their supertor in their own profession they formed a clique agains® him, And years of discouragement and poverty were the result before h@ could seize the deathless fame that awaited his prowess, ‘The Jarr Famil y . By bey iL McCardell guest Dinksto: in y The Pros Mu! York ‘ Mr, Jarr came home the ) lowing the most modern methods for) | teaching the young idea how to hice Co. his household, but Mr Eveuing World ) HE: t i o co. If with ease, . r When, oh waren, will young women | interest. On the other hind, _ th shoot HE following letter speaks for| understand that turning a cold|young man in this case may have other evening he was some-| “tow to shoot what—craps?” asked | sald Mr, Dinkston grandly, A FULL ONE TO THE GOVERNOR OF KENTUCKY! itself: shoulder on one they love only begets | changed his mind. what peeved to find that his| fr, Jarr, who had last beheld Mr. | “My idea will result in wealth beyond J 2 ae “Tr hay coldness and misunderstanding. | f so, it is well. The girl has been | rj: at the bell went unanswere YInksto! Gus's cafe using his the dreams of avarice-—which I @hall 0 GOV. STANLEY of Kentucky the country’s sincere congrat- © been going with &) Does this young woman think that | saved ‘much future misery, Yet, it| wenene hy a distinctiyonens thel taineiauty as dice ahare, for to me all gold 1s drosat" ulations and applause, young man for|the man in the case does not know|may be that her very manner may ug iid dlatinetly hear the) trained Jumping. b se dines = | Abate sors fo) sie: sil wale on 7 about three) that her coldness 1s only feigned, es-| have made him healt to neck ry yoives of his children within] epnere you go!” cried, Mra, Jarr.| Mr, Jarr was going to say al It ie no trifle for a single man to tackle a Southern mob| years, having Bene ae an 4 Jong, & period | reoonelltation in the belief that he is | and the murmur of Mrs. Jarr's dulcet| “po you think Mr. ; Nisan aul maa iarons Ao im aloo ‘or there het * ; elce . | voice en these innocen' le creatures bee io bonuses for him a 16 en Dent on fynching. When the Governor heard that lawlessness was| pa same’ ate otheey at de ae pho ever makes the iniital_movs illg) Gertruderiitaamatd i tram | ctaineee of the antual and Gecal youn % : - ne very attitude of acting one should be mage. 10 young F “ 18 if s (adie threatening the lives of a Judge and a Commonwealth’s Attorney in) ways told him/ thing and feeling another 8 enough | woman can let him know that she} Whom the Jarrs teeter all Badd “It is only his penchant for Jocu-| ; And si Dinkston 1s going to ade A A hi | to make a man stop and consider if it} desires to see him, She can surely of the Lo We W. ousework | larity,’ remarked Mr, Dinkston, vise me about the moving picture Galloway County because they would not turn over to it a prisoner things aor DED be not possible that she would do the | ascertain whether love bas died or! Union carefully dele from the Mr. Dinkston is going to make us| scenarto I have written, too, You with whom the law was about to deal, he lost no time in chartering a our good, helped | samo thing when the knot was tied, | Certainly | newspapers, cama to the door, | at lained Mrs, Jarr, “He|sneer at my literary efforts, but 36 5 8 him save, ete. I| and make him unhappy as a conse: quaintances th we OTH Rabies ris aera ta all rich,” explained vai i 8, but Mr epecial train and getting to the spot. told him some- | uence. Julways wait and let the man be tie} | “OM ; ity Nel “ : sald) is going to Import Mexican jumping | Dinkston Creel cried Mrs, Jarr. oly, Lo} 0 purse jertrade, an n rushed ba vy ‘ie a deal “Mr. Dinkstc ~ #1 have como here to uphold law and order‘and to protect thie thing one day iia ia ee: “a a a top, ble to] But where the happiness of two \the dining ro« ipeene y fan eH 4 setae ane th inp nevi Aiea . cela sant sam court with my own body if necessary,” the Governor told the crowd. hia was 4 satisfy — pre aged Bride There 16) persone aenys) ved and & et For a moment Mr. Jarr imagined] piv jacks!" The children are just | mildly. ; aay pot our good iy the broad one.| woman have gone so far to ple : ; ae vaca ; @ Se aie ee e "Those who are for lynching will have to lynch me first.” but over Ranting | When two people have arrived at the| their troth, it is certainly a great risk | Gertra a . Naw we crazy about them, Nor at dinner, I trust,” remarked he Watt 7 F ilfca ‘ » | point of being engaged, it seems that| to take the chance of future inestim- , reselve, covenanted with herself] ate Jarr aaid nothing but wondered| Mr. Dinkston, 5 The Kentucky National Guard is mobilized on the Mexican|he got very angry and stayed away. | POINt Gf DONS Unkaked it secs tnt | ible sorrow to serve unburned food, and wenice | a¢ the artfulness of his friend, the| And he whistled to the Jumping Border. But Kentucky is fortunate to have at home an Executive | N°t returning for about a week, I re- GUAT AIRE ney CesngG | suarueR| abn Patter to-Riow the truth, andl herhurry from the door to. the original tnventor of vers libre and| beans and they hopped into his handy § 5 ‘ i turned all his engagement gifts. Al-| freely and settle to t atisfaction,| get it over, than to sulfer GHEROOT cing e cuisine. on reach. ., 1 who asks for no troops behind him when it becomes his duty to pro-\thoumh it i now nearly nine montha| or “agree to disak \and slowly get over it [cinots of the cu Auton reach: | heavyweight champion of the Kng-/and obediont to thin gentle hint ta " ; ; \s e i ng the dining room Mr, Jarr fo! angus ar ad words and deed, M \. tect his State’s good name against a mob of murderous rioters, that I have not been going with hI, | trud . ie ARS BAHAR D:D FREE Hed: Sean worye: | A re ar ea that Gertrude had come to @ halt) i, vain, many times, to have Mr./manded Gertrude to set the table for Gov. Stanley has a brave and true conception of hia functions, |!) miss him and think of him so |and was eagerly wa ith the] binkston received as @ non-paying ‘dinner. ME gon canla bathe belies ? ' isabel *+| much that it Is hard to attend to my | Hace GhHIGah” Aha Stra dain the @ South would be the better for putting more like him in public| work. When 1 go out with other young mo nts of Mr. Michael Angelo ee office, man, '} sometimes enjoy myeelt while © Sir Humphrey Davy, inventor seven years were to elapse in fruitiess | Dinkston at whe dining table, Mr pies ie ‘ ete vl una Of the aafoty lacy woioh bears | exnarime wpe _ | Dinkston’s nbbvements were languid, © . ‘ > +> hve ri my ate rane ath pou i f the safety lamp experimentation before | Dink 1 d, Oo ars a . of se hope Private Kellerman's “spreadeagle” is not to take young girl of retinement and indepen- his name, and which has pro-| tered upon ita era of univer is PR THOTS: AR DE TOSd OR 1RE FAIS Backes the place of the great American bird, ence, aud have too much pride to|tected the lives of many generations | Willing and Staite in isi, Jean| Mr. Dinkston had a small rubber 7 ByH. J, Barrett —_— —--— aw a Write to him that J still love him and | of mine workers, the world owes the| Foucault in 1850, Simon of Paris in ball in play upon the cleared surface | Le _ “J want him to return electric light. [t was Davy who one] 1857, bad produced various types of] f the dining room tabi 89 C16 Name Your Price im Your Ad-|the number of inquiries, but I'll bet Letters Fro the Pe le How could we ¢ winter day in 1810 found, after longlelectric lamp, that of Simon being | band were a dozen or so small brown aie you ten to one that tt decreases the 4 ers rom Le eople out him knowing that 1 want to } ue | je lamp, th Sim Ui re ab tact A ayeaeidi|| vertiving t ; ; t the points of | tn i. : objects somewhat of the three-cor-| lnumbar at ive inaulien Ce ar acth Ga cualcuMeatiaa Ths; : : With him again? He visits a friend [experimont, Chat when the points of {the most successful, And in 1855 bs ; vires, Ib ths Keitor of The Kvening W ol hehe Peer rheie er wane web eniee of a whild, at whesaltwo carbon rode were brought intolJules Duboscq perfected the sca, or| ered shape of buckwheat, As Ar. | ¢¢ PVERTISERS who aro afrata! «jn scanning tho pagos of one of our Although I am heart and soul tn) w iat discourages many in their ‘ 1 him} contact and then drawn a few inches |lighthouse lamp, used for the first | Pinkston tossed up and caught the to name the price of thelF itzcest weeklics, L note ads covering Revor of the § ‘ fecling tion for this country | ¢ apary. th ent continued to pass} tine at the South Worcland | rebounding ball, Mr 1 1 the product never any of|the following products In which neo station” of to which they came with the same | * iar een i ‘A g {house and then at Dungeness, | little three-corne things leaped up! ny said a sineS8 | price is named: Smo! _ reverence as peoples. will y Across th ¢ cton thus) outh, Eddystone and other British} into his hand als metimes 15|"en . sing to | coser Avie oe king tobacco, hot h y How can a n entertain thes® {forming an arclight with @| oust ‘points: . He oben ‘ . a | water bottles, cleanser, men's under . ab-} wish tot yyal American re out tn tis} capacity of 2,000 candle power Invention in 1867 by Paul Jab- | BFOUPs, sometimes singly, [Bowe how many 8 Impor-| wear, host cas heaters, coaster 1 When dimeult eclate It very much Davy, having origin namo was} Mr. Jarr recognized the active ob-| tant item. wagons, spark plugs, washing mae nol fe in lade a bed he tile ope reach 4 ht spark or arc, was, years later by the Jab- | jects, They were somo of Mr. Dink-! «In some casos tt 19 excusable. If/ chines, varnish, rubbers, dictionary : ry few rose ang ' Inst exhibited at the | ston's famou t Halticorid Moxie 7 hignilanta sat i 1 i continued labor, und @ ston’s famous 4 a man ts pushing @ product in which] men's clothing, ‘type ‘ 1 ; tion in LST the value (get | \1ng, “typewriters, lamps, yand|a 1 Co ng |! bs mo{ yond the initial Jof which for commercial use canus, or trained jumping beans many styles and models at various| “What's the idea? It’ ho A ; i] ae ae 2 {pi Teen Was at tea ate eh] wie: Repl ohed the children, but) figures are Included, it 1s obviously | enough to querscuie tua nena eae i ‘ WWAliLy OF Fespect, Tove and | tn the Jablochioff candie, used onty | with no areal Jalan In the home| impracticable to state prices. But) average reader without placing une v La ‘ Abit Ly a mR ae aoe Pap ty SB | COMIN EOF SR bid in the majority of instances the ad- ssary obstacleg fn I aor ‘ very To-Day’s Anniversar y Jee. ogg i the arclight per-| “Howdy do, dear! said Mra, Jarr,|/" (he major ae rl eT enocets hon nee fo y uid feel ’ Jtected in 1878 by Charles Francis vertiger is afraid that the prico wil t aupi so ad Wi terested in thls ne ‘ , Pape et 4 Pie Meee jgiving the best of husbands a care-|fieiten the prospect away the readers rushing to the ‘irst—Are my ¢ utr tu \ part of the seventeenth, of France and other peoples, 4 ty eae nie i less kiss. be he. proape bedushug. dO dealer with the ad in thetr his country receiving proper cousid * suey lived in Paris an] Wa4 these old esends whiten formed Ppa rsahl ees id ae | “speak gotto voc!” remarked Mr,|Pl8y® for inquiries, bo t hands and loudly demanding the wes - he in eatliar the tips at a fixed stant dis- up, or by his salesman, will excuse | witch yours . Ww Bath is born in Paris on Jan > tips. belug of carbon pets are belng initiated into new ace| 8 _ Wateh yourself, If an ad catches d—Are the Americ 1 pat yUat 289 yours ago ton Finally, in 1879, Thomas Alva ¥ livities and are in @ highly nervous | ‘8? Price your eye, you read a few words Pers weil dlsvo ward ( was a ft 1 brought tl te Nene tine Naito ow, the first question asked by| the descriptive matter and then, 4 they treaUng them wi I : son bro Ne ele ight into | conditio! een 2 zs cha ra sufficiently interested, pr Repet, consite ets v , ) had defended the | fevery housohold from the kitchen to| “Are they good to eat, them Jump. | Very #ane, living mortal, bo he paws! yo yiunce to the bolton pee drop fended to Jews, $ n Pape exe his time against the aspe the bedroom by his perfection of the rea atiaa GaKtnide: per or plutocrat, is ‘What's the| tain the price or price ranuee Teeny aS Garras, r iu ana ciheen oF thi incandescent lamp, in which the con | price?? in there, you turn to something ee , ion, where f m | ductor is @ fine thread or tllament of is going on here, are But if the mathing eee, ne they ‘try to p { y-five , | classical Who insisted that lt. | 1 ey a carbon enclosed in a glass globe. Mr, Jarr inquirea| “Answer that question and, {f he's] Hit If the price 9 named and ft ts ig same go pd dash a thone to tn ve thle y rature y ws lont art, To refute! inttog which wee ait going In lights of the incandescent class} | inte d, he'll write for further data] ty roread the tent ou turn backs utmost to put them before ead Peasant oonbare q Ruch theories Cluurles Perraultefor | millions of kiddies, In all tongues, the|® Mehter current than that of the) +1 am demonstrating the inatruce [°F search out a dealer who handles) | “in my opinion, omitting the price erm in the worst possible | i é ny com of the tale-telttng | world over, And there were are ie used, the luminous substance | ive value of my active little frenda| Your Ine, Fail to answer it and he| Killa interest creates suspicion, J can giv many proofs of the in it Area Naame | stories OF Lato ed Hiding es the’ cin hae. bulb 2edro! 0: vl roflects: ‘Well, if I knew the price 1] !f Hot actual hostility. In some peos ite iranthvent of toy compatrio: Pe ae ious Men of| Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty, the from the alr has been ex-|—down Pedro! Be careful, Miguel!) plo curlosity so lively that th a ae ai try. is erat ee | founded and IV." This | rible Hluebeard, Tom Thumb, Puss in| hausted, ‘The work of Edison has| (this to two of the Halticorid Mext-|inight be interested, But tt must be} would investigate further, priee ey Ings and other working places |tn v a vo i OdiBte Buide erfecting the | exo d puay 20 pother with & ma eee ane Lert in ncnre ne Y 1 \ Ustorlan who writes | eas, and Perrault, who died in 1703,| process of generating electricity and | xitedly aa if in an endeavor to butt |it. I guess I won't do anything about) iy gone know whether or or ten ideebttu consideration, poorly ‘paid, Aitattine dana of that period, Perrault was also a! lived to reap some of the rewards of|{nventing @ ready mode of dividing|thelr little brains out.) “Their in-|it at present, price would render \t worth ‘hele gilettino della Sera, hina student of the legendary lore| nis great gift to childhood, the light. structive value in sportive play isfok “Omitting the price may Increase! time and trouble,” ee a f 2 eS.

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